Matsushitatei Motohiro, family name Nakagami, common name Shinpei, was a highly skilled Kyoto metalworker of the Otsuki lineage active in the late period. He first studied under Otsuki Mitsuyoshi before becoming a pupil of Mitsuoki, training that placed him squarely within the mainline transmission of this distinguished school. His house name was Harimaya, and it is recorded that in his later years he took tonsure and adopted the name Motohiro. He signed as "Matsushitatei Motohiro" with , frequently arranging the signature across two lines. A dated inscription on one records that in Bunka 3 (1806) he was fifty-three years of age, placing his birth around 1753 and situating his mature career in the Kansei through Bunka eras.
Motohiro characteristically worked on polished grounds () and , employing (high-relief carving) enriched with (polychrome metal inlay) in gold, silver, , and as his favored mode of expression. His subjects encompass ambitious narrative programs --- the Fifty-three Stations of the Tokaido distributed across fully unified suites of fittings (), and the Six Poetic Immortals rendered with minute attention to expression and costume --- as well as naturalistic agricultural landscapes executed in a sketch-from-life manner. He studied the Goto tradition yet tempered it with what the describes as "the gentle, commoner-oriented warmth that the Otsuki school excelled in, expressed with elegance."
Among Kyoto metalworkers of his generation, Motohiro is distinguished from contemporaries such as Hosono Sozaemon Masamori, who favored - and , and Yamazaki Ichiga, whose appeal lay in a more pronounced Goto-flavored manner. Motohiro's particular strength resided in fusing Goto discipline with the accessible, refined sensibility native to the Otsuki school. His works are praised for careful handling of the chisels, fine-grained coloration, and an engaging charm; his large-scale coordinated productions, in which every major fitting bears a signature, are recognized as possessing high documentary value and few parallels among works of their kind.
Kantei
3 descriptive axes: material (a soft-metal ground palette led by shibuichi polished ground and shakudo nanako, with refined copper, silver, solid gold and oborogin) x technique (high relief and sukidashi relief finished in colour inlay, with placed-gold colour, fine kebori and flat inlay) x themes (pictorial famous-place and genre designs in the Otsuki manner, above all the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido). With a thin corpus of four pieces his discriminators are scope-tight and low-n: the Otsuki pictorial register is the foundation his work rests on, so the citable personal separators are his unified Tokaido-stations famous-place program (named in two of the four pieces) and the records' explicit reading of his characteristic quality as a fusion of the Goto-school manner with the Otsuki school's commoner-ish gentleness (named in three of the four), each flagged accordingly.
Motohiro was a late- Kyoto metalwork artist of the Otsuki school. The records give his identity in full: his family name was Nakagami, his common name Shinpei and his house name Harimaya, and he signed under the studio-go Shokatei. They say he first studied under Otsuki Mitsuyoshi and later became a pupil of the school's founder Mitsuoki, and that in old age he took the tonsure and changed his name (one record reads the new name Mitsumitsu). His ground and hand are a field worked in high relief and colour inlay, and the records say both the Goto-school and the Otsuki-school carving methods can be seen in his work. His celebrated subject is the famous-place travel cycle: two of the four pieces here are whole unified throughout by the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido, distributed station by station across every fitting, one of them a large age-dated commission cut at fifty-three in answer to a request for a fifty-three-stations design. The records set him beside the contemporary Kyoto carvers Hosono Masamori and Yamazaki Ikka, who also worked such genre-landscape subjects, and find his characteristic quality (mochiaji) in the way he learned the Goto manner yet added the commoner-ish gentleness the Otsuki school excelled at, rendering it with refinement. With only four pieces this is a very thin corpus, all Important (), and the genuine separators from the broader field are scope-tight and low-n. This profile reads his identity, biography and signature chronology from the catalog records only.
Diagnostic discriminators
his celebrated personal subject: the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido carried as one unified program across a whole koshirae, the road running from Edo Nihonbashi to Kyoto Sanjo-ohashi with Mount Fuji and the Oi river on the tsuba, every fitting in-signed; one is an age-dated commission, the long tsuba inscription recording that at fifty-three he was asked for a fifty-three-stations design, which the records call a great labour-of-love unmatched elsewhere. Named in two of the four pieces (both whole koshirae); foreign (rate 0) to the formal Goto okite-mono repertoire. The records set him beside the contemporary Kyoto carvers Hosono Masamori and Yamazaki Ikka, who also worked such genre-landscape subjects but in a different manner. Low-n (2/4) and so scope-tight
the records repeatedly say what may be called his characteristic quality (mochiaji) lies in this fusion: they say both the Goto-school and the Otsuki-school carving methods can be seen in his work, and that he learned the Goto manner yet added the commoner-ish gentleness the Otsuki school is said to excel at, rendering it with refinement; on the farming tsuba they call its flavour more commoner-ish than Yamazaki Ikka's and read this as what is probably an Otsuki characteristic. Named in three of the four pieces. The commoner-ish gentleness is partly the Otsuki house quality rather than a tell personal to him alone, but the explicit Goto-plus-Otsuki fusion is the records' reading of his own hand. Within a four-piece corpus this is the strongest recurring discriminator, though still low-n
Material (grounds)
He works the soft-metal palette: a polished ground is the most frequent here (across the matched fittings), and a field carries his pictorial relief on the Tokaido sets; he also uses refined copper, silver, solid gold for the most lavish , and an ground. The grounds are kept as a polished or field suiting his pictorial high relief.
Technique
His core hand is high relief finished in colour inlay, present on every piece, supplemented by on the , relief, placed-gold colour, fine , thin relief and flat inlay where the design calls for it. On the matched Tokaido he builds each station as a meticulous, finely-coloured high relief in gold, silver, , and crimson copper inlay, and the records praise the minute, well-controlled chisel work that carries fifty-three distinct scenes across the set.
Themes (pictorial)
His subjects are pictorial famous-place and genre landscapes, the Otsuki-school manner carried onto the fitting. Above all is the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido, distributed station by station across a whole , with Mount and the Oi river on the and the road running from Nihonbashi to Kyoto -ohashi; a spring farming-and-planting scene worked in the naturalist manner; and a set distributing the Six Poetic Immortals one to each fitting with poem-slips on the . The records praise the way he carries these wide travel and genre scenes onto the small field of the fitting.
Pictorial famous-place and travel landscape (the Tokaido stations)
Famous-place and travel landscapes laid out across the set like a painting and worked in high relief with colour inlay, the Otsuki pictorial manner. His distinctive treatment is the fifty-three stations of the Tokaido carried as one unified program across an entire , the road running from to Kyoto with Mount on the ; the records tie the subject to the famous ukiyo-e treatments of Hiroshige, Hokusai and Moronobu.
東海道五十三次Tokaido gojusan-tsugi
Naturalist genre (drawing from life)less firmly established
Genre scenes caught in the naturalist drawing-from-life manner, which one record ties explicitly to shasei: on the farming it takes a spring tilling-and-planting scene into the fitting in the shasei manner, and the record finds in it the commoner-ish flavour it calls a characteristic of the Otsuki school. A minor, single-piece register in this thin corpus.
写生
Full iconography
Signature chronology
Placement
Recorded signatures
Documentary note
His signature chronology and the names he carries date and authenticate the work, and the records state his identity explicitly. His commonest signature is the studio-go form Shokatei Motohiro, with a , often split Shokatei / Motohiro across two lines; he also signs the family-name form Nakagami Motohiro and the full Shokatei Nakagami Motohiro, the latter frequent on the dated Tokaido (a long inscription on one reads, at fifty-three, cut in answer to a request for a fifty-three-stations design). On the smaller components of a set he cuts the bare two-character Motohiro as a ( / Hiro), a kiwabata-, a gold-seal Motohiro, a katakana Motohiro, and a tojiri- with . His family name was Nakagami, his common name Shinpei and his house name Harimaya; the records say he first studied under Otsuki Mitsuyoshi and later under the founder Mitsuoki, and that in old age he took the tonsure and changed his name, one record reading the new name Mitsumitsu. The common name Shinpei, the house name Harimaya and the late tonsure name are biography-only, never cut as a signature in this corpus.
Scholarship
The records tie his Tokaido-stations subject to the famous ukiyo-e treatments of the highway by Hiroshige, Hokusai and Moronobu, the widely-loved design he carries onto the fitting.
Designations
Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō—
Jūyō Tōken4
Elite Standing
0.02 across 4 designated works
Top 32% among makers
Provenance
1 documented provenance across certified works by Motohiro
Provenance Standing
0 works held in elite collections across 1 documented provenances